Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
India

UGC, DU standoff continues; colleges defer admissions

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Jun, 2014 10:37 AM
    The standoff between the UGC and Delhi University (DU) over the four-year undergraduate programme (FYUP) continued Monday with most of the university's colleges deferring admissions, leading to confusion among lakhs of aspirants just a day before the admission process was to begin.
     
    Even as the University Grants Commission (UGC), a statutory body of the government to coordinate and maintain the standards of university education in India, ordered the DU to scrap the FYUP "without fail" by Monday, the university was tight-lipped over the issue.
     
    Human Resource Development (HRD) Minister Smriti Irani met UGC officials to discuss the situation.
     
    With no clarity emerging about the status of the course, S.K. Garg, president of the DU Principals Association, said: "Since there is a conflict between the two sets of guidelines, the admission process is unclear.
     
    "We defer the admissions to Delhi University till the competent authority issues unambiguous guidelines," Garg told reporters.
     
    Ram Lal Anand College Principal Vijay K. Sharma told IANS that the admissions have been "deferred till a final decision is taken by either body".
     
    He said the decision to temporary defer the admission process was taken by the association, which has 61 college principals as its members, due to "lack of clarity and conflicting guidelines".
     
    "Of the 61 members, 36 were present at the meeting where the decision was taken," Sharma told IANS.
     
    The admission process was to begin Tuesday.
     
    Meanwhile, the UGC, which met to chalk out a plan pertaining to the migration of the current students back to the three-year programme, stuck to its stand of restoring the three-year programme.
     
    The commission had Saturday constituted a standing committee headed by UGC vice chairman H. Devaraj, with representatives from the academic and executive councils of DU, Delhi University Teachers Association (DUTA), Delhi University Students Union (DUSU), and college principals and teachers, to advise the university on the changeover.
     
    The commission Monday also issued a public notice against the FYUP in all leading newspapers for parents and students.
     
    "After taking into consideration the larger interests of the students, they are hereby informed that they shall seek admission in a college of the University of Delhi only to the three-year under-graduate programmes, which were prevalent prior to the introduction of the FYUP and shall pay fees only for the three-year programme," read the UGC public notice.
     
    The UGC issued the public notice Monday after its two previous orders in this regard were overlooked by the DU.
     
    The UGC's first order was issued June 20 and the second June 22, asking DU to scrap the controversial course started in the last academic year.
     
    The commission Sunday ordered DU that it should make admissions for undergraduate courses only under the three-year programme, which was prevalent prior to the introduction of the FYUP, or face action under the UGC Act, 1956.
     
    As the FYUP violates the National Education Policy 1986, which advocates the 10+2+3 system, the commission said DU must revert to the earlier system.
     
    The UGC also stated that if DU and its colleges do not comply with its directives, the university could face strict action on the UGC Act of 1956 and that the UGC would also stop its grant facility.
     
    However, some Delhi University teachers said the UGC's latest order was a "blatant transgression of the academic freedom and autonomy of university".
     
    "UGC's order is in contradiction to its own rules, regulations and acting as a more than willing instrument of the HRD ministry. That is why UGC has conveniently turned a blind eye to the FYUP in many other public-funded and private universities," DU executive council member Aditya Narayan Mishra said at a press conference.
     
    Mishra added that as per the powers and functions of the commission, it can only recommend and advice the university and not order.
     
    Amid the looming uncertainty, several students' groups held protests.
     
    The All India Students Association (AISA) demanded the scrapping of the FYUP. 
     
    Scores of AISA members staged a noisy protest outside Shastri Bhawan - which houses the HRD ministry - and shouted slogans and waved placards.
     
    "We want an ordinance so that the four-year course can be changed back to the three-year course so that the future of students remain safe," said AISA member Prince Rajora.
     
    The Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) celebrated the UGC order and distributed sweets.
     
    "We wanted the FYUP to be rolled back and the UGC order is clearly in compliance with it. Further, all other issues of the students will also be put forward to the UGC," Delhi University Students' Union president Aman Awana told IANS.
     
    However, some Bachelors of Technology (B.Tech) students said they want the FYUP to continue.
     
    "We want that we should be given a four-year degree like all other engineering colleges," Nidhi Jadeja, a B.Tech computer science student at Hansraj College, told IANS.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Modi Wave: Sensex Breaches 24,000-Mark

    Modi Wave: Sensex Breaches 24,000-Mark
    A benchmark index of Indian equities markets Tuesday crossed the 24,000-point mark for the first time in its history, recording the third straight high.

    Modi Wave: Sensex Breaches 24,000-Mark

    Don't write off Arvind Kejriwal and his Aam Aadmi Party just yet!

    Don't write off Arvind Kejriwal and his Aam Aadmi Party just yet!
    As the nation waits with bated breath for the results of the just concluded mammoth nine-stage election, one clear winner is already on display. And that is the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and its radically fresh and welcome electoral strategy. It is of little importance if it can send any member to parliament.

    Don't write off Arvind Kejriwal and his Aam Aadmi Party just yet!

    BJP to crush Congress in battle for India, say exit polls

    BJP to crush Congress in battle for India, say exit polls
    The BJP-led NDA coalition is set to return to power in India led by its prime ministerial aspirant Narendra Modi, ending a decade of Congress-led rule, exit polls said Monday after the country's most bitterly fought general election ended.

    BJP to crush Congress in battle for India, say exit polls

    Reliance pleads not guilty in 2G case

    Reliance pleads not guilty in 2G case
    Reliance Telecom told a special court on second generation telecom spectrum allocation case Monday that it had violated no guidelines formulated by the government.

    Reliance pleads not guilty in 2G case

    SC notice to EC on vote count procedure

    SC notice to EC on vote count procedure
    The Supreme Court Monday issued notice to the Election Commission on a plea seeking direction for combined counting of votes from a constituency as a whole and not ward-wise.

    SC notice to EC on vote count procedure

    Lok Sabha election ends, India awaits verdict

    Lok Sabha election ends, India awaits verdict
    India's most bitterly fought national election ended Monday evening, with some 60 percent of the 66 million electorate in three states voting in the 10th and last leg of a contest widely tipped to end a decade of Congress rule.

    Lok Sabha election ends, India awaits verdict